Monday, September 2, 2019
Its Time to Understand Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide :: Free Euthanasia Essay
      It's Time to Understand Euthanasia           Your wife of 50 years is suddenly diagnosed with a terminal disease.   She lies     in a bed, motionless and unaware of her surroundings.  The medication to  ease     her pain has been wearing off.  She just lies there in pain and unable  to     communicate with the outside world.  The doctors give her a month to  live at the     most.  What would you do?  Would you let her sit in a hospital bed  in agonizing     pain for the last few months of her life, or do you help her to prematurely  meet her     God?  That is the topic of discussion in this paper: Euthanasia.           Let's start by defining the term.  Euthanasia is also referred to as  "mercy     killing."  That is the killing of someone for their own good due to the  pain and     suffering they are enduring.  Euthanasia also includes situations where  the     individual who is suffering makes the decision to die, a type of suicide     actually. In today's world there are two types of euthanasia that are  most     common.  The first are people who, perhaps because of serious illness or  perhaps     for reasons unrelated to their illness, are extremely depressed and say  that     they want to die (Johanson 1).   Research has shown that the vast  majority of     these people are just asking for sympathy and don't really want to die  but     rather hear the calls of there loved ones begging them not to go on with  the     procedure.  They want the attempt to fail. The second type of euthanasia  involve     people who are suffering from an illness that makes them unable to  communicate     (Johanson 2).  These type of people are those who are in comas,  paralyzed, or     simply so sick that they cannot make meaningful sounds or other  communication     (Johanson 2).  This is a much more accepted type of euthanasia.   Especially in     the Netherlands where Euthanasia is more common then the United States.  There     are two sides to attack this issue from.  One being from the view of  the     Catholic Church and the other from a legal standpoint.  Lets start with  the     legal standpoint.  Who has the right to tell us when or when cannot  die?  Many     feel that we have the right to do whatever we want to our bodies because  they     					    
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.